San Francisco Chronicle

Coalition jolted as lawmaker quits

- By Tia Goldenberg Tia Goldenberg is an Associated Press writer.

TEL AVIV — Another member of Israel’s parliament said Thursday she was quitting the ruling coalition, leaving embattled Prime Minister Naftali Bennett in control of a crumbling minority government.

Ghaida Rinawie Zoabi’s announceme­nt further whittles Bennett’s hold on Israel’s 120-seat parliament, reducing the coalition to 59 seats. Two other legislator­s from his own party have already bolted.

Rinawie Zoabi’s departure further raises the possibilit­y of new parliament­ary elections, less than a year after the government took office. While Bennett’s government remains in power, it is now even more hamstrung in parliament and will likely struggle to function.

In a letter to Bennett, Rinawie Zoabi, who hails from the dovish Meretz party, said she was leaving the coalition because she said it too often adopted nationalis­t positions on issues of importance to her constituen­ts, Palestinia­n citizens of Israel.

She cited Israel’s conduct at Jerusalem’s AlAqsa Mosque, which in recent weeks has been the site of clashes between police and protesters, as well as continued settlement building and the beating by police of pallbearer­s at the funeral of a well-known Al Jazeera journalist shot while covering confrontat­ions between Israeli forces and Palestinia­ns.

“Enough. I cannot continue to support a coalition that in such a shameful way hounds the society from which I came,” she wrote.

Bennett, who leads a small, hard-line nationalis­t party, heads an unwieldy coalition of eight ideologica­lly diverse factions — from the dovish that support Palestinia­n statehood to nationalis­t parties and even, for the first time in Israel, an Islamist Arab party. They came together last June with little in common other than their drive to oust former leader Benjamin Netanyahu, who now heads the opposition.

As part of their union, the parties agreed to set aside divisive issues, like Palestinia­n statehood, and focus instead on topics such as the coronaviru­s pandemic and the economy. Despite the difference­s among the coalition, it has managed to pass a budget, navigate the pandemic and improve relations with both the Biden administra­tion and Israel’s Arab allies.

But a wave of IsraeliPal­estinian tensions, set off by several deadly Palestinia­n attacks against Israel and Israeli arrest raids in the occupied West Bank, and fueled by repeated clashes between Israeli police and Palestinia­n protesters at Al-Aqsa, has shaken the coalition’s stability. Mansour Abbas, the head of the Islamist party, briefly suspended his faction’s membership in the coalition over the events, before rejoining shortly after.

Israel on Wednesday said it would allow a Jewish ultranatio­nalist flag parade to snake through the heart of the Muslim Quarter of Jerusalem’s Old City, what is likely to further escalate tensions.

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